Widow of Chinese dissident Liu back in Beijing: NGO

This handout file photo provided by the Shenyang Municipal Information Office shows late Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo's wife Liu Xia (L) and her younger brother Liu Xiaoxuan, holding flowers as they scatter Liu's ashes at sea off the coast of Dalian on July 15

Liu Xia, the widow of jailed Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo who died in detention in July, is back in Beijing but still under house arrest, a Hong Kong NGO said Sunday.

Liu had been kept incommunicado by the authorities for almost a month, her lawyer has said.

Lu Siqing, founder of the Hong Kong-based Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy, said he spoke to her by phone at her Beijing home on Saturday.

He said a tearful Liu, 56, explained in a "very weakened voice" that she was under treatment with strong anti-depressants.

"Various friends of Liu Xia confirmed that she was back in her apartment" in the Chinese capital, "and that her home was kept under surveillance by guards and police dressed in civilian clothes," the NGO said in a separate statement.

Liu Xiaobo was sentenced in 2009 to 11 years in jail for "subversion" for calling for democratic reforms in China -- a fight rewarded in 2010 by the Nobel Peace Prize.

He died on July 13 of liver cancer in a Chinese hospital at the age of 61, after being transferred there from prison.

Liu Xia, who has been under virtual house arrest since 2010 but has never been charged, was last seen in public in mid-July at her husband's funeral.

Her relatives were unable to contact her in the following weeks.

Liu Xia "is held incommunicado by the Chinese authorities in an unknown location," said the couple's lawyer Jared Genser in a complaint filed with the UN.

A video message posted online in mid-August in which Liu Xia said she needed time to "readjust" was greeted with caution.

"It is certain that she was forced by the authorities to make this video," said Hu Jia, a Chinese dissident and friend of the couple, at the time.

Lu Siqing gave few details about the circumstances of Liu Xia's return to Beijing.

But he said she had been unable to obtain the urn that contained her husband's ashes which were scattered at sea.

Hu told AFP Sunday that the move to Beijing would "have benefits for her".

"At least she's in her home and her friends know where they can go to see her. What's more, in Beijing, some diplomats can also see her."

But, he warned, she would almost certainly have to leave the city again before the 19th Communist Party congress starts on October 18th.

Political dissidents and their relatives are often forced to leave the capital before sensitive political events.